IntraText Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Alphabetical [« »] hateful 1 hath 2 have 73 having 39 he 297 head 3 heads 1 | Frequency [« »] 42 concerning 39 been 39 has 39 having 39 other 38 chapter 38 say | St. Justin Martyr Hortatory address to the Greeks Concordances having |
Chapter
1 V| For Aristotle himself, having said that God and matter 2 VI| that it is of three parts, having the faculty of reason, of 3 VII| understanding. Moreover, having first declared that everything 4 IX| And he in the first book, having said that he bad learned 5 IX| in social matters." Then, having proceeded a little further, 6 XI| all ignorance and deceit, having now perhaps wholly abandoned 7 XII| ancient ages died mute, not having the use of letters." It 8 XIII| to their own country. And having, as was natural, marvelled 9 XIII| fictions; but we ourselves having been in Alexandria, saw 10 XIII| Pharos still preserved, and having heard these things from 11 XX| really existing God. For having heard in Egypt that God 12 XXI| are not. Men, therefore, having been duped by the deceiving 13 XXI| the deceiving demon, and having dared to disobey God, were 14 XXI| the living God. Wherefore, having appeared to him first, as 15 XXII| PLATO.~ ~Plato accordingly having learned this in Egypt, and 16 XXIII| contradict himself. For having formerly stated that he 17 XXIV| were to promise me, that, having burnished off my old age, 18 XXV| turned, is convicted of having fallen into the very errors 19 XXV| writing of their histories, having not yet been discovered.~ ~ 20 XXVI| prophecies he read, and, having learned from them the doctrine 21 XXVII| but Ardiaeus and the rest, having bound hand and foot, and 22 XXVII| feet and skin. But Plato, having fallen in with the testimonies 23 XXVII| the prophets in Egypt, and having accepted what they teach 24 XXVIII| only Plato, but Homer also, having received similar enlightenment 25 XXVIII| he had learnt that Helen, having received from Theon's wife, 26 XXVIII| moon, and the stars. For having learned this in Egypt, and 27 XXVIII| learned this in Egypt, and having been much taken with what 28 XXIX| source than from Moses, having learned, indeed, from the 29 XXIX| the name of form, but not having at the same time been instructed 30 XXX| formed of earth, Homer, too, having discovered from the ancient 31 XXX| things Homer and Plato, having learned in Egypt from the 32 XXXII| These things, I think, Plato having learned from the prophets 33 XXXV| Greece, is now come, that ye, having been persuaded by the secular 34 XXXV| learn the true religion. Having then laid aside all false 35 XXXVI| God." Socrates, indeed, having uttered this last sentence 36 XXXVII| said that she washed, and having put on her robe again, retires 37 XXXVII| the verses, the prophetess having no remembrance of what she 38 XXXVII| ceased, and the reporters having, through their lack of education, 39 XXXVIII| inseparable from Him in power, having assumed man, who had been